|
Set free from the
bondage of Mormonism Jerald and
Sandra Tanner |
|
The
Mormon Church, which professes to teach the true way of salvation, teaches many
things that are not compatible with the teachings of Christ. Mormon leaders
have made the tragic mistake of pointing their people toward a church instead
of toward the Saviour. They claim that their church is the only true church
and that all others are false and have no authority. This tends to make the
people more concerned about the organization than about their relationship
with Christ. |
|
Mormonism
teaches that shortly after the death of Christ, the whole Christian world fell
into a state of apostasy. In the Bible, however, Jesus said ". . . upon
this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail
against it" (Matt. |
|
|
|
Statement
by Jerald Tanner. I was born and raised in the Mormon Church,
and before I was eight years old I felt that it was the only true church. I
remember being told that a certain man who was excommunicated from the church
was possessed with the devil. I can recall walking past this man's house and
being afraid of him because I firmly believed that he was possessed of the
devil. I believed that a person would almost have to be possessed of the
devil to leave "the true church." My conviction was so strong that
I was shocked to hear a boy in Sunday school say that he didn't know for
certain that the church was true. I felt that it was strange indeed for a
person to be a member of the Mormon church and yet not know it was the only
true church. I believed very strongly that Joseph Smith was a prophet of God
and that I belonged to the only true church. When I was about eighteen years
old I had to face reality. I can remember that the first time I saw David
Whitmer's pamphlet, An Address to All
Believers in Christ, I threw it down in disgust. After throwing it down,
however, I began to think that perhaps that was not the right way to face the
problem. If David Whitmer was wrong in his criticism of Joseph Smith, surely
I could prove him wrong. So I picked up the pamphlet and read it through. I
found that I could not prove David Whitmer wrong, and that the revelations
Joseph Smith gave had been changed. I later went to |
|
|
|
I
stand all amazed at the love Jesus offers me, |
|
Oh,
it is wonderful that He should care for me! |
|
I
marvel that He would descend from His throne divine, |
|
|
|
When
we sang this song my heart burned within me. I have since learned, however,
that even this song was borrowed from the Protestant faith. But regardless of
where it came from, it touched me very deeply. It made me think of my Saviour
and the great debt I owed to Him. If there had been more songs like this in
the Mormon church and if Christ had been preached instead of Joseph Smith, I
would, perhaps, have received Christ into my life in the Mormon church. As it
was, however, I was nineteen years old before I heard the true message of
Christ preached, and that was in another church. A short time later, I
received Christ into my life and found peace, joy, and deliverance from sin.
As the Apostle Paul expressed it: "Therefore if any man be in Christ, he
is a new creature; old things are passed away; behold, all things are become
new" (2 Cor. |
|
|
|
Statement
by Sandra Tanner. Since I was born and
raised in the Mormon church, and am a great-great-grandchild of Brigham
Young, I had very strong ties to the Mormon faith. I was about seventeen
before I ever attended another church. As a teenager my life centered around
the Mormon church. Because I was active and paying my tithing I thought I was
in pretty good standing with God. I knew I sinned but I felt my activity in
church would somehow outweigh what I did wrong. I believed (as the Mormons
teach) that I was inherently good. I had no fear of God's judgment. Besides
the things that were wrong in my own life, I began to have doubts about my
church. Could it really be the only true church? Was polygamy really right?
Why couldn't the Negro hold the priesthood? Was temple marriage really so
important? Why were its rites kept such a secret? Did God actually command
Mormons to wear special under-garments? I had many questions going through my
mind. |
|
When
I started college I enrolled in the Mormon Institute of Religion class. I
started asking questions in class, trying to find answers to my doubts. But
one day my institute teacher took me aside and told me to please stop asking
questions in class. There was a girl attending the class who was thinking of
joining the church and I was disturbing her with my questions. What a
surprise! I had hoped to find answers to the many things that were bothering
me and now I had been silenced. |
|
Shortly
after this I met Jerald and we began studying the Bible and Mormonism
together. As we studied I began to see the contradictions between the Bible
and the teaching of the Mormon church. I had grown up thinking that Brigham
Young was one of the greatest men that ever lived. He was always presented to
me as such a holy man—God's prophet, seer, and revelator. Then Jerald had me
read some of Brigham Young's sermons in the Journal of Discourses on blood
atonement. I was shocked! I knew what Brigham Young was saying was wrong but
I couldn't reconcile these sermons with the things I had always been taught
concerning him. I knew these were not the words of a prophet of God. |
|
Jerald
also showed me the changes that had been made in Joseph Smith's revelations. The
thought kept coming to me that if God had actually given those revelations to
Joseph Smith why would they need rewriting? Surely the Creator of the
universe could say it right the first time! |
|
As
I studied I not only found errors in Mormonism, I also began to comprehend
there was something wrong in my own life. As I studied God's Word I realized
I was a sinful hypocrite. In spite of my sins I had thought I was right with
God. Yet the Bible says: "For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of
God is eternal life, through Jesus Christ our Lord" (Rom. |
|
After
Jerald and I were married we started visiting the different Protestant
churches. As I listened to the sermons I began to realize that God was not
concerned with peoples' church affiliations, but with a personal
relationship. Christ taught a way of love, not a religious system. He stated:
"By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love
one to another" (John |
|
God
reaches out to man, not because he deserves it, but because God loves him.
John wrote: "Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that he loved
us, and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins" (1 John 4:10).
Paul wrote: "But God, who is rich in mercy, . . . even when we were dead
in sins, hath quickened us together with Christ . . . For by grace are ye
save through faith; and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God: not of
works, lest any man should boast"
(Eph. 2:4, 5, 8, 9). |
|
I
now want to share with you the particular events of the day I surrendered my
heart and life to Jesus Christ: Early one morning ( |
|
|
|
I
love the Christ who died on Calv'ry, |
|
In
my heart there rings a melody, |
|
|
|
This
song fully describes the way I felt. How glorious to know Christ died for my
sins so I could have a new life in Him. Our lives testify to all we meet
whether or not we are truly Christians. Paul wrote: "But the fruit of
the Spirit is love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith,
meekness, temperance; against such there is no law" (Gal. 5:22-23). Sandra Tanner |
|
Today
converts are swarming into the Mormon church, but very few of them really
know much about Mormonism. We feel safe in saying that many of them are
converted to the social program of the church rather than to its doctrines.
Those who were born in the church in many cases "know" it is true
but don't know why it is true. Many Mormons will stand up in testimony
meeting and dogmatically assert that Joseph Smith was a prophet and that they
belong to "the only true church," but very few of them check to
make sure that their faith is based on reality. Many members of the Mormon
church prefer to let their leaders do their thinking ("when our leaders
speak, the thinking has been done"); it is so easy to let someone else
do our thinking. The Bible warns: "Thus saith the Lord; Cursed be the
man that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh his arm, and whose heart departeth
from the Lord" (Jer. 17:5). We sincerely hope and pray that the Mormon
people will begin to awaken to the true message of Christ, realizing that in
Him, and Him alone, can we have salvation—salvation that brings genuine
deliverance from sin and real fellowship with the God who loved us enough to
die for us. |
|
|
|
From: Jerald and Sandra Tanner, The Changing World of Mormonism, Chicago
1980, pages 555-559 |